Friday, March 29, 2024 Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 licence.

Peter Agre

« All quotes from this author
 

The need for general scientific understanding by the public has never been larger, and the penalty for scientific illiteracy never harsher… Lack of scientific fundamentals causes people to make foolish decisions about issues such as the toxicity of chemicals, the efficacy of medicines, the changes in the global climate.
--
Peter Agre's speech at the Nobel Banquet, December 10, 2003

 
Peter Agre

» Peter Agre - all quotes »



Tags: Peter Agre Quotes, Authors starting by A


Similar quotes

 

The penalty for scientific irrelevance is, of course, that the statistician's work is ignored by the scientific community.

 
George E. P. Box
 

Induction was shown to be untenable as a scientific method by Popper in The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1959). Instead, advances in scientific understanding come ideally from hypothetico-deductivism: firstly, development of a hypothesis in relation to a problem situation, and secondly, its testing in relation to all relevant knowledge and furthermore by its great explanatory power.

 
John Carew Eccles
 

There is a narrowness of action, though not of intent, which characterizes university departments, and scientific publications and scientists in general: if it is too popular, it is somehow vulgar and wrong. You can't really speak to those people across the street. I live next to the chemists at MIT, but I never see them. I hardly know who they are, yet between physics and chemistry it is hard to know who should study what molecule. I myself am guilty. We form communities not based on the problems of science, but on quite other things. This is part of the general split between the intelligent member of the public and the scientist who speaks in narrow focus. But the great theoretical problems which I believe the world expects will somehow be solved by science, problems close to deep philosophical issues are the very problems that find the least expertise, the least degree of organization, the least institutional support in the scientific institutions of America or indeed of the world.

 
Philip Morrison
 

This freedom of communication is indispensable for the development and extension of scientific knowledge, a consideration of much practical import. In the first instance it must be guaranteed by law. But laws alone cannot secure freedom of expression; in order that every man may present his views without penalty there must be a spirit of tolerance in the entire population. Such an ideal of external liberty can never be fully attained but must be sought unremittingly if scientific thought, and philosophical and creative thinking in general, are to be advanced as far as possible.

 
Albert Einstein
 

There is no scientific consensus that man is the primary cause of global warming. ... Nature, not human activity, rules the climate.

 
Christopher Monckton
© 2009–2013Quotes Privacy Policy | Contact